^°-'*. 4 o V .^ v^. ?; v^s. ^s- 5-7-^ ^^-^^^ Q_ * ^^-^^^ 0^ . Villi <' ,1 "I HISTORY LACKAf A5SA VALLEY. BY H. J^OLLISTER, M.D. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS. FIFTH EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED. PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA. 1885. f^^l Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 18fi9, By H. HOLLISTER, M.D., In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New York. Copyright, 1885, by H. Hollister, M.D. /-/oy^/o PREFACE TO THE FIRST KDITION. Ln presenting to the pul:jlic these " Contributions," it seems proper to state that the collection of the embodied facts was more the result of the love possessed by the writer for such incidents and history, than the hope of either a pecuniary reward, or a literary reputation. Becoming familiar with a few features in the history of the Lackawanna Valley, the writer was induced, by the solicitations of his friends, to put them into a shape whereby their jjublication might jDOSsibly awaken an interest, or perhaps elicit new and more connected material from a region where nothing yet had been done in the way of gathering its local history. From the absence of a proper and continued record — from indistinct and often conflicting memories — and from the death of all who were familiar witli its earliest settlement, it is tery proba- ble that events narrated are sometimes given in an imperfect, and even in an inaccurate manner. It would not be surprising if such was the fact ; but the reader must bear in mind that not only the personal, but the general history recorded hei'e was written while the author was engaged in a large practice, and harassed by all the continual anxieties occurring in one of the most exhausting and thankless professions in the country. While the author asks no indulgence from this circumstance, yet he apprehends that a practice of twelve years, with its too often accompanying annoyances— compelled to view human nature 4 PKEFACE. in every possible light, and encounter it in its most humiliating aspect--eminently fits him to bear the murmurs of those who suppose that a volume can be as easily written as read. None of the Sketches are arranged in chronological order; many are necessarily brief, meager, and unsatisfactory, owing to the great dearth of material ; while some, it is possible, do better justice to the subject. It would have given pleasure to the writer, to have presented a genealogical view of the original families in the valley ; but as this contemplated feature would necessarily have enlarged the volume beyond its intended limits, without adding much to its general interest, it was abandoned. The obligations of the writer are due to all his friends, who have, by their liberal subscriptions to the volume, manifested such an interest in its welfare. H. HOLLISTEB. Providence, Pa., 1857. The volume, of which a second edition is now published, hae been so thoroughly modified and revised in its genei-al outline, as to present the features of a dilFerent, and, I trust, a better work than the preceding one. Very many pages have been wholly obliterated ; the remainder re-written and radically changed, while a number of pages of interesting liistorical matter — sought after from trustworthy records and testimony with an earnestness that possibly may deserve expressions of approbation and success — • have been added thereunto. In my former volume, I gave but a general recognition of the favors of my friends, who, in various ways, contributed toward its successful development. In this, I desire to return especial thanks to several persons whose manly sympathies and generous aid lay me under a grateful obligation and remembrance. PREFACE. 5 For materials drawn from the Pennsylvania Archives and Colo- nial Records, and other authorities, appropriate acknowledgment appears in its proper place. In addition to these sources of infor- mation, fully noted and credited, I would return thanks to G. B. Nicholson, Esq., for access to the Westmoreland Records ; to B. H. Thboop, M. D., for valuable siiggestions in regard to the volume; to Selden T, Scranton, of Oxford Furnace, N. J., for acts of friendship which characterize his desire to make every man's pathway blossom with the rose ; to S. B. Sturdevant, M. D., for fa- vors which were given in so cheerful a manner as to greatly enhance their value ; to the Rev. Dr. Peck, for the biographical sketch of the late Hon. George W. Scranton ; to Hon. Steuben Jenkins, whose antiquarian knowledge promises to the world an invaluable documentary history of Gen. Sullivan's celebrated Wyoming expedition in 1779; to Stephen Rogers and D. Yarington, for papers concerning the settlement of Carbondale ; to N. Orr & Co., of New York, and Eugene Frank, of Wilkes Barre, for their skillful execution of the cuts adorning the work, and to Harper & Brothers, for the sale and use of electrotypes, illus- trating scenes in the Lackawanna Valley. The author of the folloAving pages, who was not born upon the banks of the Lackawanna, but was nurtured among her mountains, would do injustice to his own feelings did he not gratefully acknowledge the kind, yet undeserved, encomiums of the editorial fraternity, and the favorable reception the community gave his " Contributions" in 1857. May he not indulge in the hope that the young valley is not now less athletic and friendly than then ? H. HOLLISTEE. Providence^ Fa., 1800. ^ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. PAUB Slocum Hollow in 1840, - - - Frontispiece. Campbell's Ledge, - - - - - - 26 Indian Map of Capoose, - - - - 31 Bald Mount, - - - - - - - 65 Ira Tripp, ....... 125 MoNOCASY Island, ' - - - - - - 169 Bloody Rock, - - - - - - 170 John B. Smith, ...... 209 Nay-aug Falls, - - - - - - 212 The Old Slocum House, - - - - - 219 Wm. Henry, --.-..- 225 Selden T. Scranton, ..... 241 Joseph H. Scranton, - - - - - 245 B. H. Throop, M. D., - . - - - 249 Scranton in 1860, -.-... 26I First Baptist Church in Carbondalb, - - - 299 First Locomotive run in America, ... 354 Thos. Dickson, - - - - - - 361 Delaware Water Gap, . . . . . 389 Hon. John Brisbin, - - - - - - 391 Hon. George W. Scranton, . . - . 405 8 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. PAQB Henry Eoberts, M. D., - - - - - 411 h. hollister, ...... 418 L. A. Watres, ....-- 445 Dr. Silas B. Eobinson, .... - 459 Lewis Pughe, ------- 467 The Eiot in Scranton, . . - . - 475 Archbald in 1844, --...- 491 Wm. Merripield, -.-.-- 495 E. Merripield, .-...- 515 OOJS[TEI^TS. INDIAN HISTORY OF WYOMING. page Traditions regarding a great tyrant on the Susquehanna in 602 — The Five Nations controlling the war-paths in the valley in 1640 — The extent of their sachemship — Tlie Monseys stroll along the Lackawanna about 1700 — Teedyuscung and liis Delaware tribe ordered to Wyoming — Visit of Count Zinzendorf to Wyoming — Dr. Gill's account of his visit — Journey of Conrad Weiser to " Wo3'amock" in 1754 — "Spies" reported here — The Delaware Indian Village of Asserughnnj, near Campbell's Ledge — Adjouqua — A fort to be built at Adjo^iqua (moutli of the Lackawanna) at the request of the Six Nations in 1756 — Interesting scrap of history 17-29 INDIAN VILLAGE OF CAPOOSE. Capoose, a contemporary of Teedyuscung, sells his lands in New Jersej', migrates to the Lackawanna and makes his "smoke" upon its bank — Is visited in 1742 by Count Zinzendorf — Hunting and planting groimds at Capoose — Alienation of the Delaware and Monsey tribes after Braddock's defeat — Gnaddenhutten burned, and Broadhead's plantation on tlie Dela- ware laid waste — Indian Congress held in Easton, in October, 1758 — Log- houses built at Wyoming for Teedyuscung, by Gov. Penn — Major Parson's description of the Great Sachem while he was "brightening the chain of friendship " at Easton at this time 29-39 LACKAWANNA RIVISR AND VALLEY. Iroquois and Delaware diversity of names, now corrupted into Lackawanna — Beauty of tlie stream and valley — The union of the Lackawanna with the Susquehanna portraj^ed by the late Mrs. Sigourney 40-43 WAS WYOMING ONCE A VAST LAKE? The Kittatinny Mountain now serrated with gaps, forming a dam for the reception of the waters of the Chemung, Chenango, Delaware, and Sus- quehanna — Ridges crossing the great rivers — Interesting views of the celebrated C. F. Volney, Schoolcraft, and Professor Beck — A singular large rock at Pittston out of place — Opinion of the late Hon. Charles Miner and Judge Packer — Debris of ocean-life upon the Pocono 2,000 feet above tide water — Probable ancient course of the Susquehanna — Veins of coal oblit- erated by the agency of water favor the theory — Notches in the Moosic range near Scranton 415-49 WAR-PATHS. From Asserughney Village to Capoose — One trail leads to the Delaware — The other diverges to Oquago (now Windsor, N. Y.) 49-50 INDIAN SPRING UPON THE MOOSIC MOUNTAIN. Whites killed by its side in 1778 50-51 10 ■ CONTENTS. INDIAN RELICS AND FORTIFICATIONS. paob Along the Susquehanna — At the mouth of the Lackawanna — Upon the Moosic — Mound opened at Capoose in 1795 — Another found in Covington in 1833, containing vast deposits — Former neglect of scientific men in gathering and preserving Indian implements 51-59 INDIAN APPLE-TREE. Orchard at the wigwams of Capoose a century ago — A single tree still seen by the roadside, bringing forth its fruit 50-61 BEACON FIRES. Traces of ancient signal fire-places upon the higher points of the Moosic Mountain, used by the red men at the time of their occupancy of the Lackawanna Forest 61-63 SILVER MINE ON THE LACKAWANNA. The whites charged by the Indians with carrying off silver ore from Wyoming in canoes, in 1766 — Interesting revelation . of an old Oneida chief — Three salt springs, and three mines, respectively of silver, gold, and lead, reported by him to be located within the boundaries of Wyoming. .63-64 GOLD MINE. Bald Mount — A gold mine supposed to be located at its base — Singular report of a captive concerning it , 64-67 SALT SPRINGS. Their location 67-68 LKAD MINE. Tuscarora Creek — An item of its local history — A reminiscence of Gen. SulUvan's march up the Susquehanna into tiie Indian empire in 1779.. . .68-70 GENERAL HISTORY. Wyoming, in its general signification, embracing not only the entire Lack- awanna Valley, but all the territory within Provincial limits purchased by the Yankees — Reports of these lands reaching Connecticut, lead to the formation of the Smquehanna Cojiipany in 1753 — Men who were sent out to explore Wyoming are tracked and watched by the Proprietary Govern- ment of Pennsylvania — Beauty of the inland settlement — Incipient strife for its possession — Its primary purchase of the Indians in 1754 by the Susquehanna Company and the Delaware Company— Pennsylvania, cha- grined at the success of Yankee diplomacj^, attempts to intimidate people from New England— Men and women to be shipped to Philadelphia, "men - to be imprisoned or compelled to enlist in the Indian War on the Ohio " Cayuga Indians also threaten the Yankees with savage greeting if they settle at Wyoming— The Moravians fraternize with the Indians at Wy- alusing— Preaching at " Waioming and Leck-a-we-ke " (Lackawack) in 1755— Reward oflered for Indian scalps— Cochecton settled — Charles Tomson and Christian Frederick Post visit Wyoming and " Lee-haugh- huuf'in 1758, by order of Governor Penn— Backsinosa with 100 w'ar- riors at Lee-haugh-hunt— Country visited and described in 1758 by two Indian interpreters, Moses Titamy and Isaac Hill— Teedyuscung complains of the Yankees along the Delaware— Settlement inaugurated in Wyoming CONTENTS, 1 1 PAGB in 1'7()2 — Teedyuscung again complains to the Governor, who makes fair promises — Fruits of the interview — Murder or expulsion of every white person from Wyoming in 1763 — Evident compiicitj^ of Pennsylvania officials in the massacre — Atrocious butchery of friendly Indians at Lan- caster by the whites — John Anderson opens a store at "Wyoming in 1766 — Original grant of lands to Connecticut and to Wm. Penn — Trenton De- cree 70-105 GEN1<:RAL history (continued). Purchase of Wyoming lands by Pennsylvania in 1768 — Preparations of the Susquehanna Company to make a permanent settlement upon their pur- chase — Occupancy of the territory by Pennsj'lvanians — Block-house erected at the mouth of the "Lamawanack " in 1769 — Settlers taken pris- oners — Names of persons in Pittslon " fit for mischiel " in 1769-1772 — The Lackawanna paths guarded by Pennymites to prevent the Yan- kees from escaping capture — Westmoreland Records, where are they? — Clearings extended up the Lackawanna — Settler's rights voted — Zebulon Marcy's cabin — flints and cartridges carried to Wyoming by the Penny- mites to tranquilize the "wrangling" inhabitants — Providence settled — General expulsion of the Yankees from the valley by Pennsylvania sol- diers 105-121 ISAAC TRIPP. Emigrates to Wyoming, where he plays a prominent part in its history — Taken prisoner at Capoose — Ira Tripp 121-130 WESTMORELAND. Officially recognized by Connecticut as a portion of its Colony 130-132 WALLENPAUPACK SETTLEMENT. Within the jurisdiction of Westmoreland — Its history — Fort erected — A.larm of the inhabitants — They flee from the savages 132-134 JAMES LEGGETT. Civilization slowly carried up the Lackawanna — Vote of Congress regarding Wyoming difficulties 1 34-1 37 FIRST WAGON ROAD FROM PITTSTON TO THE DBLAWARK. Three shillings per day given men for working upon the road — Importance of the thoroughfare 137-139 MILITARY ORGANIZATION. Rigid discipline essential to the existence of the young settlement — The inhabitants compelled to train every fourteen days — Ear-marks for cattle running at large 139-141 RELIGION, MORALITY AND STILL-HOUSES First church erected in the centra) portion of the valley — Bundling — Indians forbidden to have whisky becaus ■ of the murderous agitation it caused in the forest — Yet siiU-houses are encouraged by the whiles — Eight still or beer houses in Providence in 1798 — Recreation of the inhabitants — A committee meet in Wilkes Barre '• at six a Clock in yefonnoon " to consider the province of "Lickquor " — Causes of its commercial importance.. . .141-148 12 CONTENTS. PAGK MILLS UPON THE LACKAWANNA 148-149 DK. JOSEPH SPRAUGE. The first physician in the Lackawanna Valley — " Granny Sprauge ' 150-151 DR. WILLIAM HOOKER SMITH— OLD FORGE. Great surgeon in Gen. Sullivan's Expedition — First purchase of stone-coal recorded in Luzerne County, in 1791 — Old Forge as described by the late Hon. Charles Miner in a letter to tlie writer. 151-154 THE SIGNAL TREE 154-155 THE WYOMING MASSACRE. Its cause, chaiacter, and consequences — Interesting version of events trans- piring immediately before the battle, by a witness still living — But a single habitation left standing in the entire Lackawanna Valley — General Sul- livan's Expedition in 1779 — " Dried scalps of women and children " found in the wigwams by Ool. Hartley — Proposition made to hunt the Indians with horses and dogs — Extraordinary adventure and escape 155-171 GENERAL HISTORY— (resumed). Connecticut and Pennsylvania renew the struggle for Wyoming with in- creased bitterness — The Lackawanna people, turned out of their houses by armed bands urged on by land-jobbers, are treated "excessively cruel " — Every New p]ngland emigrant carried to prison and fed on bread and water — Liberated, they return and defy the Pennymites— A bold project of Col. Ethan Allen, John Franklin, and other shrewd Yankees to form a new State out of Wyoming, annihilated by the simple formation of Luzerne County iu 1786 — The various compromising laws give tranquillity to the settlement 177-186 PROVIDENCE TOWNSHIP AND VILLAGE. Tlieir general history-^Rich lands of Capoose reluctantly vacated by their tawny occupants — Exeter, Providence, and the country north, made into one election district in 1774 — Indian apple-tree at Capoose designated as " Ye Town Sign-post " — Meeting of settlers under its branches in 1775, to draw for lots in Putnam Township (now Tunkhannock) — Taxables of Providence Township for the year 1796 — Dr. Silas B. Robinson — The "great blow" of 1834 186-205 DU:sMORE. Causes which led to its settlement and expansion — Source of its prosperity — John B. Smith 206-211 HISTORY OF SCR ANTON. The first log-structure erected in Deep Hollow (Scranton) — Philip Abbott gives expression to the necessities of the farmers at Capoose by the erection of a grist-mill upon Roaring Brook in 1788 — Unique character of the mill— First bridge across the Lackawanna in 1796 — Hyde Park cleared and settled- Dolphs— Dr. Joseph Davis— The Slocums acquire the property and inaugurate z'ron-worA-s— Stili-liouses and general prosperity around Capoose— The old landmark of Slocum Hollow— Post-of3ce established- Providential escape of Mr. Slocum, in 1808, from a frightful death— The CONTENTS. 13 PAGE obliteration of the forge and still in 1826, temporarily suspends the life of Slocum Hollow — Four prominent gentlemen early agitating the interests of the valley — William and Maurice Wurts, Henry W. Drinker, and Wra. Meredith — Their plan to resuscitate the Hollow — A brighter aspect strug- gling its way into the settlement — Primary impulse toward a village in Scranton, given by the Drinker railroad project — Wm. Henry — Acqui- sition of the Slocum Hollow property by Messrs. Scrantons, Grant,, and Mattes — Inauspicious attempt to start a furnace in Scranton in 1841 — Dark period in the history of the iron- works, 1842-3 — Joseph H. and E. G. Scranton — Sketch of the different churches in Scranton, from 1841 to the present time, with the names of the pastors — Unfaltering energy of Col. Scranton — Nail factory built below the falls of Nay-aug — Village of Har- rison laid out in the woods — Selden T. Scranton — Failure to get a post- office re-established — The year 1846 auspicious in the history of Scran- ton — Bankruptcy only averted by the Trail — Lively times in the town- ship — Dr. Throop builds a cottage near the swamp — Organization of the iron company — Difficulty of reaching a market for iron — Post-office again estabUshed in Scrantonia — Conception of a locomotive road westward, by Colonel Scranton — Wyoming House and hotels — Thrift of Scranton — Its newspapers — Description of the iron-works — List of physicians who have lived and practiced thei» profession within the city limits of Scranton — Its lawyers — Its industrial enterprises — Founderies — Machine-shops — Capouse Works — Sash and blind factory — Stove manufactories — Dickson Manufacturing Company 21 1-268 BLAKELKY. Its name and general history — Second church in the valley built within its limits 269-273 YANKEE WAY OF PULLING A TOOTH 274 THOMAS SMITH 275 SETTLEMENT OF ABINGTON. The former danger and wildness of Leggett's Gap — Names of settlers.. .275-282 THE GREAT HUNTER, ELI AS SCOTT. His encounter with a bear — Great destructiou cf rattlesnakes 282-284 "DRINKER'S YMKCll''— {Now Covington). Its earliest history — 25,000 acres of land purchased by Mr. Drinker in 1788, upon the Pocono — Ascending the narrow Lehigh in a batteau to its upper waters — Names of the first settlers — Drinker's Turnpike 284-288 SETTLEMENT OF JEFFERSON. Its border traversed by the Yankees — Asa Cobb — A wolf killed by Mrs. Cobb with a pitchfork — Imaginary shire town and county 288-291 CHASED BY A PANTHER. Perils of the forest thirty years ago 291-293 DUNNING. Pleasant Valley— Barney's Led-e -Hon. A. B. Dunning 293-295 14 CONTENTS. CARBONDALE. pag* Ragged Islands— Capt. Geo. Rix— The " big flats " cliopped and logged off- Unique attire of a woodman — Christopher E. WObur — 1802-1814 — Ex- plorations by Maurice and Wm. Wurts— Dundaff laid out by Mr. Conyng- ham in 1822 — Coal-mine opened — A village emerging from the Carbondale glen — First frame-house erected — Sled-loads of coal drawn twenty miles to the Paupack 295-300 LACKAWANNA VALLEY IN 1804. Elder John Miller — A general retrospective glance of its inhabitants and its appearance as given by him — Zephaniah Knapp — Development of the valley 300-310 FORMATION OF TOWNSHIPS; PRIMITIVE MINISTERS. Rev. Jacob Johnson, the first minister in Wyoming — Curious letter — Rev. Wm. Bishop — Hyde Park log church — Habits of the people 310-314 PROPRIETORS' SCHOOL FUND AND PRIMITIVE SCHOOLS. 314-316 PATHS AND ROADS. Journey from Connecticut to Pittston in 1793 — Little Meadows — Visited in 1793 by Bishop Asbury 317-322 THE RISE OF METHODISM IN THE VALLEY. Anning Owen — Two distinctive impulses given its development — Rev. Dr. Geo. Peck — Methodist ministers 322-326 SMELLING HELL 326-328 FORMATION OF ANTHRACITE COAL. Its vegetable character 328-329 ORGANIC REMAINS FOUND IN THE COAL STRATA. Their abundance in the Lackawanna Valley 329-331 MINERALS AND MINING 331-332 COAL LANDS FIFTY YEARS AGO. Worthlessness of skme-coal in Slocum Hollow fifty years ago 332-333 THE DISCOVERY AND INTRODUCTION INTO USE OF ANTHRA- CITE COAL. General prejudice against its use — Difficulty of giving coal away, and the danger of attempting to sell it — Hon. Charles Miner — Jacob Cist — Triumphs of stone-coal — Used up tlie Lackawanna as a fuel in 1812 — Details of in- terest 333-343 WILLIAM AND MAURICE WURTS. Their explorations in the coal-fields of the Lackawanna — A trivial incident favors Wm. Wurts in purchasing the wild lands where Carbondale now stands — Hon. Paul S. Preston — First load of coal ever drawn from the Lackawanna shipwrecked in the turbid waters of Jones's Creek — New York and the Lackawanna Valley linked together by the social genius of canal, railroad, and river — Delaware and Hudson Canal Company — The first loco- motive-engine in America runs a short distance from Honesdale, in 1828 — Achievements of this great company — Thos. Dickson 343-363 CONTENTS. 15 PALLING IN OF THE CARBONDALE MINES. pagi A-ppalling tomb — One mile of slate and rock between the miners and the outer world 363-367 EARLIEST MAIL ROUTE THROUGH THE V.ALLEY, Letter carried to Toedyuscung in 1762 367-369 THE PENNSYLVANIA COAL COMPANY. The entrance of this gravity coal-road into the valley vehemently opposed by intriguing men — Its final success 369-372 FROM PITTSTON TO HAWLEY. Fine views from Cobb Mountain — Local history — Cobb's Gap. . . 372-379 DELAWARE, LACKAWANNA, AND WESTERN RAILROAD. Historical summary of the Susquehanna and Delaware Canal and Railroad Company — The Leggett's Gap Railroad ; now merged into the Delaware, Lackawanna, and Western Railroad — A brief detail of the early struggles of energetic men to connect the Lackawanna with the Delaware — Henry W. Drinker, William Henry, Col. Geo. W. Scranton, John Brisbin, Samuel Sloan 379-393 LACKAWANNA AND BLOOMSBURG RAILROAD. Crossing Wyoming battle-grounds — Wyoming scenery — Jas. Archibald.. .393-306 SKETCH OF THK EARLY HISTORY OP THE LEHIGH AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD. Indian civilizers at Gnaddenhutten (now Weisaport) in 1746 — Casual dis- covery of anthracite near Maucli Chunk, gives foetal life to the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, and tames the wild waters of tlie Lehigh — Slackwater navigation — The jealous interest of Wyomitig, represented by Hon. Andrew Beaumont, inimical to the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company — Jealousies allaj^ed and harmony promoted by the company agreeing to build a gravity railroad over the mountain from White Haven to Wilkes Barre — Appalling flood upon the Leln'gh in 1862 — Locomotives descend from the mount into Wyoming — Grandeur of the mountain view — John Leisenring — John P. Ilsley 396-403 HON. GEORGE W. SCRANTON. A sketch of his life, and an estimate of his moral character, by Rev. Dr. Peck 403-410 LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. The high ridge separating the Lehigh from the Lackawanna, receives another diadem of iron — Hon. Asa Packer — The commercial greatness and impor- tance of this thoroughfare, fraternizing with the Delaware, Lehigh, and upper Susquehanna 410-417 16 CONTENTS. APPENDIX. I. PAGE Indian relic controversy — Wyoming fair 419-442 II. The Lackawanna Valley fifty years ago and now 443 The churches of Scranton 444 Our school system 448 Health of the valley 449 Our charities — The Lackawanna and Moses Taylor Hospitals 449 Deaf and Dumb Institution 450 Home of the Friendless 451 Board of Trade .• 452 Our water 452 The lakes of the county 453 Precipices 453 Building development 454 Fire department..! 455 Mayors and the judiciary 455 Our physicians 458 The Delaware and Hudson Canal Company 458 Coal waste and coal-breakers 462 Henry Koberts, M.D 465 Hon. Lewis Pughe 466 The strikes 470 The Thirteenth Regiment 477 An industrial point 479 The industries of Scranton — The Dickson Manufacturing Company 480 Scranton Brass- .and File-Vv^orks 484 Scranton City Foundry 484 Plan ing-m ills — Providence 485 Scranton Stove-AVorks /"SS Green Ridge ;86 Scranton Gl.ass Company 487 Green Ridge Iron- Works 487 Up the valley — Carbondale 488 Soldiers' Monument — Van Bergen